180.367 - Investments and Portfolio Management

This is an introductory course in investments. The course is broken into four parts. The first part covers the fundamental concepts of asset returns, risk, and risk-aversion, and then studies how investors should optimally choose their portfolios given the observed patterns of risk and return. The second part of the course studies the reverse question: given how investors choose their portfolios, what are the equilibrium patterns of risk and expected return in financial markets: in other words, what is the expected return that various types of assets must earn to compensate investors for bearing their risk. The second question is studied in the context of two theories of returns: the capital asset pricing model and arbitrage pricing theory. The third part of the course studies the empirical evidence for and against the equilibrium theories of asset returns, with an emphasis on the evidence in support and against the efficient markets hypothesis. The fourth and final part of the course studies three classes of assets in more detail. The topics that are covered include models of equity valuation, bond valuation and hedging, and option valuation and hedging.



Syllabus (PDF Copy)

Course Slides
Problem Sets
Problem Set 1  |  Solutions
Problem Set 2  |  Solutions  |  Solutions Spreadsheet
Problem Set 3  |  Solutions
Problem Set 4  |  Solutions
Problem Set 5  |  Solutions
Problem Set 6  |  Solutions

Exams (with solutions)
2009 Final Exam
2010 Final Exam
2011 Midterm Exam
2011 Final Exam: Version 1
2011 Final Exam: Version 2
Other Materials
Handout on Matrices
Practice Problems
More Practice Problems
Formula Sheet (for final)
Spreadsheet Illustrating Duration and Convexity Calculations
Spreadsheet on Calculating Optimal Portfolios of Risky Assets
Spreadsheet on Black Scholes

 


   
Johns Hopkins University Department of Economics Johns Hopkins University Department of Economics